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updated 22:28, Wed December 26, 2007

China's SAIC to Buy Nanjing Auto in Hope of Creating 'World-Class' Automaker

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BEIJING (AP) -- Two of China's biggest automakers announced a deal Wednesday to combine their production assets in hopes of creating a company able to compete in global markets.

The tie-up between Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp. and Nanjing Automobile (Group) Corp. -- both state-owned companies -- adds to a flurry of recent alliances in China's fast-growing vehicle market, the world's second-largest.

SAIC is the local partner of General Motors Corp. and Volkswagen AG and has launched its own Roewe brand. Nanjing Auto is known for reviving the MG sports car, bought from defunct British automaker MG Rover Group.

The two hope to create a "world-class auto company of an unprecedented scale in China," they said in a joint statement.

The communist Beijing government has been encouraging such tie-ups in the fragmented auto industry, hoping Chinese producers will pool resources to compete with bigger, richer foreign rivals. China's domestic market is dominated by GM, Volkswagen and other foreign producers. The country has about 150 automakers, most of them small and financially weak.

SAIC will dominate the new venture, while Nanjing Auto's parent, Yuejin Motor Group, will retain a minority stake.

SAIC will pay Yuejin 2.1 billion yuan ($285 million) for Nanjing Auto's auto and core components businesses and combine them with its automaking subsidiary, SAIC Motor Corp., the companies said.

Yuejin will get a 4.9 percent stake in SAIC Motor, while the two companies form a new joint venture, Dong Hua Co., to operate Yuejin's remaining components, services and trade assets. SAIC will control a 75 percent stake in this venture while Yuejin will have a 25 percent stake.

The SAIC-Nanjing Auto deal follows an announcement in July that the two companies would cooperate in design, production and sales.

Also Wednesday, Italian automaker Fiat SpA said it will end its production joint venture with Nanjing Auto by selling its stake to its Chinese partner. Fiat said they will continue to cooperate in commercial vehicle and parts manufacturing.

Passenger vehicle sales in China grew by 20 percent in November to a record monthly high of 490,751 units, according to research firm J.D. Power & Associates.

Among other alliances, Chrysler Group and China's biggest domestic automaker, Chery Automobile Co., have a deal to produce cars for export. Chery had 8.3 percent of China's auto market last year, but most Chinese producers have less than 1 percent, according to J.D. Power.

Shanghai Automotive Industries Corp.: http://www.saicgroup.com

Nanjing Automobile (Group) Corp.: http://www.nanjingauto.com.cn

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